The book I described a few posts
ago, Jonathan Rauch’s Constitution of Knowledge, is an exploration of
the quest for truth. He demonstrates how difficult it is to arrive at truth and
contends that this quest is always a communal endeavor. He has given me a lot
to think about. In the LDS Church, we tend to come at the question from a different
angle, claiming that we can know the truth of various ideas, documents, and
events through a confirmation of the Spirit. But my own experience and the
experiences of others suggest that this may be an overly simplistic belief. Let
me illustrate with seven stories, some personal, that illustrate how difficult
it can be to interpret spiritual feelings. At the end, I’ll offer a few
observations.
I.
In February 1976, I attended a memorable zone conference in
a suburb of Hamburg Germany. One of the mission president’s assistants had
received authorization to make what in hindsight seems like a totally
unwarranted promise. But he stood there in front of the zone and in the name of
Jesus Christ promised us missionaries that if we would commit to work
fifty-five hours every week in March, then someone we were teaching would
surely be baptized. Now, I know that promises like this one run against the
very principle of free will and have been specifically condemned by LDS General
Authorities, but when the president’s assistant spoke those words, the Holy
Ghost hit me right in the solar plexus, and I knew without a shadow of a doubt
that he was speaking the truth. Apparently almost everyone else felt the same
witness I did, because when the assistant asked us to raise our right hands to
the square and promise to work those fifty-five-hour weeks, everyone in the
zone quickly raised his or her hand. Everyone, that is, except my senior
companion.
I couldn’t believe it. The wind went out of my sails as
quickly as if I had floated into the Doldrums. How could he? I thought. I hadn’t seen a baptism yet on my mission,
but here was a guarantee. All we had to do was work fifty-five hours. Heavens, we
were already doing that. There wasn’t even any sacrifice involved. But my
companion wouldn’t promise. I was so angry he could have strangled Bruder Carlson
(not his real name).
Later I learned that my companion was afraid he might get
sick or break his leg or that something out of his control would prevent him
from keeping his promise. He didn’t want to make a promise he couldn’t keep.
Eventually, after a long talk with one of the zone leaders, who had earlier
been a senior companion to Bruder Carlson, he made the promise. And Bruder
Carlson didn’t get sick or break his leg. And we worked our fifty-five hours
each week. But none of our investigators got baptized. Of course, I realize
that the promise never specified when
the investigator would get baptized, but for years I kept in touch with some of
the members of that ward, and my inquiries have uncovered no evidence that any
of the small handful of investigators we taught have yet been baptized. When I
was working at Church Magazines, I could request information from the good
people down in Membership, as long as I had a good reason. This would have made
a great story for the magazines, so I checked with Membership on all the investigators
we had at the time. Zip. And anyway, the understanding we all had at that zone
conference was that the baptism would occur soon. To this day, I still don’t
understand what that strong spiritual confirmation meant, if anything. All I
know is that it was a very powerful spiritual feeling.
II.
A few years later, as a new elders
quorum president in a BYU student ward, I was searching at the beginning of the
school year for a counselor among elders I had never met. After visiting all
the men’s apartments in the ward, the person I had the strongest spiritual
feeling about informed me privately after our visit that he had been
excommunicated and was working toward rebaptism. There was a reason I had such
a strong impression of him, but it wasn’t because he was to be my counselor.
Before the year was over, he had been rebaptized and had his priesthood and
temple ordinances restored. But if he had said nothing, I would probably have
followed that spiritual feeling and called him as my counselor, a calling he
would have probably been embarrassed to turn down. Only his forthright
admission saved us both from what would have been an awkward situation.
III.
Elder Gerald N. Lund tells the
story of a bishop who had a strong spiritual feeling when giving a blessing to
young mother in his ward who was experiencing a serious health crisis.
Following his feeling, he blessed her that she would be healed. But she died
within a few hours. Elder Lund suggests that this bishop had a real spiritual
experience, but he misinterpreted it. Perhaps the meaning of the spiritual
feeling was just an assurance that the Lord was in charge of the situation.
(From pages 8–9 in Hearing
the Voice of the Lord)
IV.
Years ago, my wife was called to
be Primary president, a calling the bishopric undoubtedly had prayed about. She
accepted, but afterward she felt great turmoil about the calling, not because
she wasn’t capable and not because she wasn’t willing. Something else was wrong.
After talking it over with me, she called the bishop. He prayed about it again
and then called her back and said, “Sister Terry, this calling is not for you
right now.” A couple of months later, we experienced a problem pregnancy that
resulted in our third child being born three months premature. For the next
year or more, we were in over our heads with his medical needs. Sheri would
have had no time or mental and emotional bandwidth to be Primary president. A
few years later, however, the same calling was extended, and she accepted the
call without any inner turmoil. The bishop obviously missed something in his
initial prayers, but he was humble and willing to be questioned by my wife and
corrected in subsequent prayers.
V.
In recent years, I have observed
friends and fellow ward members who have been stricken with cancer. One in
particular was cured in a miraculous way. But a few have prayed and felt very
strongly that God was telling them they would be healed. These were very
righteous people, one even serving in a stake presidency. I don’t doubt that
they exercised great faith and believed God was telling them they would conquer
the dreaded disease. After intense suffering, though, they died. I think this
illustrates that it is very difficult, especially when we are in our extremity,
to tell the difference between the spiritual message we desperately want God to
give us and our own impassioned feelings.
This difficulty apparently also
extends even to Apostles. Many years ago now, my boss told me about his
sister-in-law. She was serving in a foreign land with her husband, who was the
mission president there. When she was diagnosed with cancer, she returned to
the United States for surgery and treatment. She also received a special priesthood
blessing from an Apostle. In this blessing, he promised her that she would be
healed. After a short battle with the disease, however, she passed away. I have
often wondered what the Apostle was basing his promise on. Was it just a warm
feeling about this woman and her future? Or was it more specific than that?
Regardless, it is both distressing and comforting to know that deciphering
spiritual feelings is something all of us struggle with, even Apostles.
VI.
Several years ago, I published in Dialogue
an essay titled “Frau Rüster
and the Cure for Cognitive Dissonance.” It details an overwhelming spiritual
manifestation that I shared with two other people—my missionary companion and Frau Rüster, one of our
investigators. At the time of the experience and in that essay, I interpreted
the manifestation to be a confirmation of “everything” about the Church. But in
the ensuing years, I learned a great deal more about what “everything” entails and
how complicated the Church and its history are. A decade later, I included an
updated version of this essay as a chapter in a mission memoir published by BCC
Press. In the memoir, I had to scale back my interpretation of what the
manifestation meant. Significantly, I added a question mark to the title. Part
of my reason for reconsidering my interpretation is that Frau Rüster, who shared that
spiritual outpouring, understood it far differently than I did. All the Spirit
told her was that she needed to repent. And despite this wonderful spiritual
outpouring, she never did join the Church.
VII.
The final story may provide a good
summary of my point in this post. Frau Tiedemann (not her real name) had a
dream one night in which she was surrounded by fire. Her children were
screaming, but she couldn’t get to them. She woke up and sat up in bed. A power
came over her that prevented her from moving. A voice then spoke to her. It
gave a cryptic message, “Chadwick [my companion] is right. Watch over your
family.” The voice repeated these words four or five times. She was frantic.
She was sure her family was in grave physical danger. She called us the next
morning, hysterical, so we rushed over to her house. Elder Chadwick assured her
that it was probably a message about spiritual danger and her children’s
eternal welfare. This was “obvious” to us, but certainly not to her.
This experience illustrates that
it’s not just spiritual feelings that are difficult to decipher. Sometimes the
Spirit speaks in actual words and sentences, but even these can be vague, and
we are left on our own to interpret them.
Our Craving for Certainty
In the Church, we crave certainty.
But often the Spirit is both subtle and ambiguous. Perhaps we place too much
emphasis on testimony and not enough on faith. After all, our first article of
faith says nothing about sure knowledge. The first principle of the gospel is
not certainty; it is faith.
If God wanted to give us
certainty, he wouldn’t have had Moroni take back the gold plates. He would
appear not just to Joseph Smith but to each of us and tell us in no uncertain
terms what is true and what is not. And he definitely wouldn’t have given us
scriptures that are both incomplete and internally inconsistent in many ways. But
that is apparently not what God wants. Maybe he just wants to see how we will
behave in the face of uncertainty. Maybe that’s what faith is all about.
I don’t pretend to know how the
interface between the Spirit and our minds and emotions works. All I know is
that the interface is a bit spotty at times, perhaps all the time. And for us
to declare our certainty may be more than we can really justify.
On the other hand, there have been
times when I’ve had strong spiritual impressions, and I’ve followed them, and I
have apparently understood them correctly. At least things turned out the way I
felt I had been told they would. But in my life, it has been about a 50-50 proposition.
At least half the time, I’ve been wrong.
I guess all I’m saying here is
that we probably ought to be a lot more cautious in our declarations and
interpretations and admit that we may very well be wrong about a lot of things.
My 25 years as a full-time editor in the field of Mormon studies has taught me
that we know a lot less than we sometimes think we do.
To walk forward in such circumstances is the substance of faith.
ReplyDeleteRoger: Amen to your call for fewer declarations of certainty in favor of greater humility and receptivity to broader understandings of what may be conveyed. It sometimes seems like the Spirit strives less to engender certainty than to promote flexibility. The Book of Mormon speaks of inviting and enticing, words that speak more of nudging us than of guiding us on a clearly specified path.
ReplyDeleteOnce, as a missionary in southern Germany in 1980, my companion and I were given explicit directions by the Holy Spirit that led us into the woods outside of town. There we came upon the body of a man who had taken his own life. I've spent nearly fifty years puzzling over why we were so easily guided to a dead man when the Spirit could just as easily have sent us to living, receptive people (a rarity in Germany). At a minimum, our discovery provided some clarity to the deceased man's family after days of frantic concern.
Wonderful story. Thanks.
DeleteIn your “Bruder” autobiography, the final chapter (“Nachwort”) is an excellent personal essay on this topic. Your post prompted me to read it again, which was time very well spent. I recommend it to others.
ReplyDelete